Abstract

The rapid growth and spread of radiographic equipment in medical centres have resulted in a corresponding increase in the number of medical X-ray images produced. Therefore, more efficient and effective image classification techniques are required. Three different techniques for automatic classification of medical X-ray images were compared. A bag-of-visual-words model and a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) were used to extract features from the images. The two groups of extracted feature vectors were each used to train a linear support vector machine classifier. Third, a fine-tuned CNN was used for end-to-end classification. A pre-trained CNN was used to overcome dataset limitations. The three techniques were evaluated on the ImageCLEF 2007 medical database. The database provides medical X-ray images in 116 categories. The experimental results showed that fine-tuned CNN outperforms the other two techniques by achieving per class classification accuracy above 80% in 60 classes compared to 24 and 26 classes for bag-of-visual-words and CNN extracted features respectively. However, certain classes remain difficult to classify accurately such as classes in the same sub-body region due to inter-class similarity.

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